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Friday, August 1, 2008ARTIST AT WORK: From Dead Wood, Life‘Magic Breath’ Evident In Sculpture On Library Lawn By JIM KEVLIN COOPERSTOWN Seriously, guys, how many of our wives STILL consider us “brilliant” after a decade of marriage? But spend any time with sculptor Torsten Gipperich, and you suspect spouse Abby Amols may have a point. Drivers who’ve been braking lately and slowly passing by Glimmerglen Cottage on West Lake Road to see the voodoo-like totems, this one reminiscent of ET, that one of the stone statues of Rapa Nui, might suspect the same. Torsten is working behind the main house, sanding away at an assemblage that looks like the heavy frame of an antique barn, only pregnant. A chain saw is over there on a log.That sculpture, still unnamed, is being installed in the next few days in front of 22 Main, Cooperstown’s village hall, which also houses the Village Library and the Cooperstown Art Association. It will be there for a year, part of a program that has made the stone sculpture of Fly Creek’s Walter Dusenberry and the silver-ribbon-like camel of Hartwick Seminary’s Don Gialanella (recently departed for New Mexico) a surprising part of walking down as traditional a Main Street as any in the country. Torsten, who was born in Ghent, and wandered with his family through Belgium to Vancouver and Toronto before finally settling in Watertown, up on the St. Lawrence River, at age 4, has been immersed in art since third-grade fingerpainting days. That was long before he met Abby in the 1990s. He was working in Ellen Weir’s Homescapes, (where Alex & Ika’s is today), and she – then Cooperstown Art Association executive director – followed her mother, Jacqueline, into the store. They’ve been married 12 years now; (son Peyton Reid, 18 months, is the latest novelty.) Back to voodoo. Abby, an art historian, toured Cameroon in 2001 while researching her doctoral thesis on the topic of voodoo art, which strives to put life into inanimate objects, and Torsten embraced and was inspired by the concept. The fecundity of his latest work in a case in point. “He takes the garbage that people make, and the garbage that nature makes,” Abby said, “and fills it with a magic breath. He tries to start the pulse, to bring back the life force.” Or as Torsten puts it, “I take dimensional lumber and add organic shapes.” As far back as he remembers, Torsten has been “doing art.” Seriously, his third-grade teacher did send him to the back of the classroom to continue his fingerpainting while students went on to multiplication tables and similarly exciting topics. His father, Rudy, was an architect with Bernier Peck, the Watertown firm, and his mother, Ursula Mickle, was a potter, so creativity was all around him. He studied art for two years at Munson-Williams Proctor Institute in Utica, then three more at SUNY Purchase, then another few wild years on Dingman’s Point, barren and remote during the long winter, when the population of nearby Alexandria Bay dropped to a few hundred. Here was a neighborhood where there was plenty of room, “a spontaneous place to be,” and no one around to complain about the noise. Torsten found himself ranging the woods near his one-room cabin, creating his art from stumps, logs and standing trees. He and a painter, Christine Tisa, adopted the “open studio” concept, and people began wandering in and around while the artists were at work. Suddenly, it was enough. It was too isolated. He rampaged through the woods, chainsaw in hand, destroying his creations. “They belonged there,” he said. “They needed to stay there.” Stints in Rochester and Albany followed, before Torsten found his way to Otsego County, and Homescapes, and Abby, and a home/studio in Westville, where the family lived until returning to Glimmerglen Cottage a year ago to help her mother prepare the property for sale. Torsten is a carpenter as well as a sculptor, or perhaps a carpenter-sculptor. He works at each, although commissions – most recently, columns installed at the First Landing Foundation in Virginia, to delineate the theatre area – keep coming. Like many artists, Torsten is resistent to telling you what he’s “trying to do.” “Just respond to it. Don’t think about it. Just respond.” Labels: Arts, Glimmerglass, Sculpture, Torsten Gipperich Sunday, July 13, 2008Cherry Valley Sculpture Trail: Art By The Ton By JESSICA GUIDOCHERRY VALLEY This year, 21 sculptures by 18 sculptors will populate the third annual Cherry Valley Artwork Sculpture Trail, which opens at 7 p.m. Friday, July 18, with a reception at the Cherry Valley Museum. Artist range from locals, to those halfway across the country. One of the sculptures unloaded last week is a one-ton, 18-foot sculpture shipped from Indiana by Gary Wahl, professor at Albion College in Michigan. “This is the third year doing this, and it has just grown and grown,” said Jane Sapinski, Cherry Valley Artworks director. “It really has grown into quite an amazing show.” The sculptures, which have been rising around the village in recent days, are made of everything from wood, to metal, to neon. They can be found hanging from trees, resting on the lawns, and floating on ponds. Returning artists include Terry Slade, Hartwick College art professor, and one of his students, Dillon Clarke, who sculpted “Tsunami” on the lawn of the former Tryon Inn. Rocky Pinciotti’s sculpture – in front of Cherry Valley Hardware – is a wall with four neon pieces that light up in order. As one goes off, the next one comes on, flashing the words “Lions, Tigers, Bears, Oh My!” Lorilee Coleman hand-crafted more than 1,000 origami cranes, stringing “Peace Cranes” on trees near Clark’s “Tsunami” in front of the Tryon, where they reflect the sun. Sapinski noted that it was a great community effort. Manylocals helped out. Nathan Waterfield, who runs a tree-trimming business, helped Lorilee. Cherry Valley Memorials used one of its loading trucks to help get Wahl’s sculpture into place, and the Cherry Valley Museum was more than greatful to host the trail opening. Many community members allowed their land to be used for the placement of the sculptures, and the neon sculptures were created in a building that was donated to Cherry Valley Artworks specifically for the cause. Cherry Valley Artworks received a grant from the Upper Catskill Council on the Arts that made the sculpture trail possible. The Otsego County Chamber and the Upper Catskill Council on the Arts are doing a county-wide tourist motion called “artQuest.” Labels: Arts, Cherry Valley, Glimmerglass Saturday, June 7, 2008EntertainmentSubscribe to Posts [Atom] |
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